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HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS

Californian comes from 7 shots back over final nine holes to tie Palmer, then wins Monday playoff
March 5, 2012
By David Shefter, USGA

Billy Casper (right) consoles Arnold Palmer after beating him in a playoff for the 1966 U.S. Open. (USGA Museum)

This is the second in a series of articles looking back at the USGA championships conducted at The Olympic Club in San Francisco, site of this year’s U.S. Open Championship.

Some people view the 1966 U.S. Open at The Olympic Club as a complete collapse by Arnold Palmer.

Palmer had the championship all but sealed with nine holes to play. He led Billy Casper by seven strokes, and the storyline had shifted to whether Palmer could better Ben Hogan’s 72-hole Open scoring record of 276, set in 1948 at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif. Palmer had opened the final round with a solid 32 on Olympic’s first nine, but the inward nine would prove to be The King’s Waterloo.

Casper, then 34, was no stranger to U.S. Open pressure. The California native had won the championship seven years earlier over the challenging layout of Winged Foot Golf Club’s West Course with a brilliant display of putting on some of the toughest greens in the game.

Yet history was not on Casper’s side. Nobody had ever overcome a seven-shot deficit with nine to play. In 1960 at Cherry Hills Country Club in suburban Denver, Palmer had trailed 54-hole leader Mike Souchak by seven strokes before shooting a final-round 65 to win by two shots over amateur Jack Nicklaus.

But that was over 18 holes, not nine.

Palmer began the second nine with a bogey at the par-4 10th, and he would suffer another bogey at the par-3 13th hole. Still, Palmer needed only to play even-par golf the last five holes to secure the win.

The turning point came at the par-3 15th. Casper faced a long, left-to-right breaking birdie putt that he managed to convert for a 2. Palmer made a bogey and suddenly his lead was trimmed to three.

“I never thought I could win until I birdied the 15th hole, even though I was three shots behind with three holes to play,” said Casper. “It’s the only time I felt I could catch him.”

Two more strokes were trimmed at the dogleg-left par-5 16th hole when Casper birdied and Palmer bogeyed, and Casper finally caught Palmer with a par at the uphill par-4 17th hole after Palmer recorded yet another bogey. Two pars at the closing hole left the combatants tied at 2-under-par 278, the second-lowest 72-hole total ever registered in a U.S. Open, and facing an 18-hole playoff on Monday.

The playoff began just like the final round, with Palmer getting off to a sizzling start, posting a 2-under 33 to Casper’s 35. This time, the par-4 11th hole would prove to be the turning point. Casper registered a birdie 3 to Palmer’s 5. It was the start of a bogey spree for Palmer, who would eventually shoot a 3-over 73 to Casper’s 1-under 69.

“I beat him pretty solidly on the back nine,” said Casper, who outscored Palmer on that side over the final two days, 66-79. “Coming back… to top Arnold in 1966… I would say is something to remember.”

Palmer challenged the following year for one more U.S. Open title at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, N.J., but his longtime rival Jack Nicklaus would get the best of him in the final round, shooting a 5-under 65 to break Hogan’s championship scoring record by one stroke. Palmer finished four shots off the pace for his fourth runner-up showing at the Open in six years. Nicklaus had edged Palmer in an 18-hole playoff for the 1962 Open at Oakmont (Pa.) Country Club, and Palmer lost to Julius Boros in a three-man playoff in 1963 at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass.

Casper went on to claim the 1970 Masters for his third and final major championship.

In 1966, The Olympic Club had proven once again to be an obstacle for the frontrunner. Eleven years earlier, unheralded Jack Fleck had caught Hogan with a 72nd-hole birdie, and he went on to shock Hogan in an 18-hole playoff the next day. Now it was Palmer’s turn to be caught over the final nine holes. When the Open returned to Olympic in 1987, frontrunner Tom Watson succumbed to the less-heralded Scott Simpson. Similar circumstances would befall Payne Stewart 11 years later against Lee Janzen.

One other interesting footnote emerged from that 1966 Open. Johnny Miller, then a 19-year-old two years removed from his U.S. Junior Amateur triumph, earned low-amateur honors. Miller, who posted 290 to share eighth place, was a junior member at The Olympic Club and his play that week would portend future success. Seven years later, he posted a final-round 63 at Oakmont to win his only Open title.

David Shefter is a senior staff writer/content manager for the USGA. Email him at dshefter@usga.org.